Climate change is divisive among Americans. Among scientists, there is virtually a consensus affirming climate change; the political scene, however, has been polarized, and polarization appears only to be growing. Though different segments of the population may understand the issue at varying levels of detail, the majority of these understandings must stand consistently for America to take decisive action on the matter, whatever action that may be. To address polarization, this research frames the issue as a national conflict in two parts: 1) a relational problem among America's constituencies, which sets the stage for 2) problems of communicating climate change information, which is difficult given gaps and complexity of information, amidst misinformation. Together, these two components explain the standstill of climate change initiatives. This research sets outs to address the question: “to what extent have opposing climate change views become polarized and dialogue been disabled, and how do internal and/or external narratives influence individual perspectives?” Possible research methods include: a quantitative analysis measuring political polarization, and qualitative close readings of two texts, each representative of the polarized constituents. Predicted results: 1) America has become increasingly polarized, so much so that it significantly interferes with academia, policy, and daily life, and 2) Narratives among Americans, on all sides of the conflict, are complex combinations generated by individuals, the media, and the forces that shape the media itself. Far from ordinary, these conflict-conditioned narratives perpetuate and escalate conflict, while also further disabling intergroup communication. The implications of this research entail how the current political impasse can be overcome, which thereby enables climate change initiatives to proceed uninhibited.